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Re: truth or otherwise

a 'diagnosis' is the identification of the nature of an illness or other problem by examination of the symptoms.
So, it could be a doctor diagnosing a fatal illness, or a motor mechanic making a diagnosis as to what is causing that 'knocking' noise in your car engine.

A doctor makes a diagnosis and tells me I have cancer and 6 months to live. If I refuse to believe his diagnosis...well...come 6,7, or perhaps 8 months, and I'm dead and the autopsy reveals cancer: the truth of his diagnosis was revealed 'in the future', 6-8 months later when I died of cancer.

If I lived for another 20 years and autopsy showed I died of a heart attack, and no signs of cancer were found in my body, then after one year, never mind 20, it was apparent the diagnosis was wrong.

The truth (I have cancer) or otherwise (he was wrong - I didn't have cancer) was revealed in time.

Re: truth or otherwise

I don't think it needs to be personalized to this occasion. Whatever the original need for muted expression, 'truth or otherwise' has a long history as a euphemistic alternative - long before the situation depicted in this post!

Re: truth or otherwise

I'm with Charlie on this one. But it has to be recent, otherwise we'd have heard it first. AE is far more conservative than BE, and has a high proportion of phrases and idioms that were frozen in time four hundred years ago. Anthony Burgess pointed this out, in Language Made Plain : he was shocked to re-read Chaucer and find so many of his hated Americanisms, e.g. "I guess," appearing throughout. Hehe.

Re: truth or otherwise

Originally Posted by konungursvia

I'm with Charlie on this one. But it has to be recent, otherwise we'd have heard it first. AE is far more conservative than BE, and has a high proportion of phrases and idioms that were frozen in time four hundred years ago. Anthony Burgess pointed this out, in Language Made Plain : he was shocked to re-read Chaucer and find so many of his hated Americanisms, e.g. "I guess," appearing throughout. Hehe.

Exactly. All innovation radiates outward from North America. (Britain will get wind of that eventually.)